1 -1 Hemingway Back In Civilization With .. 8 . . . Minor Cuts, Burns ENTEBBE. Uganda ( I Novel ist Ernest Hemingway returned to civilization Monday night with only slight cuts and burns taj show for two plane crackups in I the wild East African bush. But Mrs. Hem ingway, his fourth wife had two rib fractures and needed a; rest Baney Freed Of Murder Guilty of Rape LITTLETON. Colo. (j -1 A dis trict court jury convicted John H. Baney. 32-year-old merchant sea man, of rape Monday in the death cf Mrs. Dorothy Gall. i4, last Sept. 20. - ? j Baney, of Salem. Ore., earlier was acquitted by .directed fverdict of charges he murdered tie Den ver woman. Mrs. Gall died on the operating table at an Englewood hospital after being administered an anes thetic for a minor operation. She was hospitalized after she reported she was beaten and r&ped by a companion following a tour of Denver bars. " j Baney faces a possible sentence of from three years to Slife in prison. .. if He was arrested in Kansas City , while driving a car with a license : number Mrs. Gall gave officers be fore her death. f During his trial, a defense wit ness testified he found ah anes thetic solution almostf twice as ; strong as the label onj the bottle 'indicated at the hospital where Mrs. Gall died. j Twyman J. Klayder, cheinist for the U.S. Pure Food anh tirug Ad ministration, said the; b o 1 1 1 e, labeled "Procaine 2 pef cent," ac , tually contained a 3.9 pr cent solu tion. Injection of so strong a solu tion probably would bring death, other witnesses declared. ShowStorm Wreaks Havoc In Northwest Fluoridation Panel TonigHt A panel discussion of the fluoridation program proposed for the city water supply will be held at the Salem Trades and Labor Council tonight . Scheduled to participate in the I Condemnation Suits Filed on Exp resswav Two condemnation fsuiis were filed by the State Highway Com mission Monday against parties .owning sections of property lying between the Wilsonyilje and Hay sville junctions of thW proposed Portland-Salem ExpreswSy. Suits for right of way, filed with the Marion County clerk, seek an empaneled jury to deterniine the compensation due defendants for the land. j ! .Named as defendants I in one suit were Frank and jMarHha Gil lies and Harold W. a?nd Dorothy Nelson. Defendants in the second suit are Edith M. and Edward An derson, f I The Hemingway party arrived from a 125-mile motor trip over jungle and mountain roads after spending the night near the Albert Nile, tributary of the Victoria Nile River. After the second crackup, all they had to worry about was the herds of elephants and other uni dentified wild beasts which howled around them and the swarms of mosquitoes from the river. A camp fire kept the beasts and in sects at bay. "I feel wonderful," Hemingway said as he arrived, "but my wife has to rest as she has two cracked ribs. No Heroisim "There has been no heroism, no hardship, no lack of direction at any time. Coming from m man who has described death on Italy's World War I battlefields, in the moun tains of civil war Spain and in. the Chicago gang wars, that appeared to be a conservative account of his latest real life adventure. The first crackup occurred Sat urday when the Hemingways were flying in a chartered sightseeing plane near Murchison Falls, noted Uganda beauty spot. Dived to Miss Birds Hemingway said the trouble de veloped when the sightseeing plane dived to avoid a flight of ibises black and white birds big enough to smash the pilot's window. ' The party had to choose between landing on a sandspit in the river where several crocodiles lay bask ing or on an elephant track' through the thick scrub growth, and they chose the scrub. They spent the night around the camp- fire surrounded by an elephant herd attracted by my wife s snoring." A tourist launch took the Hem ingways and their pilot, Roy March, from the falls 60 miles to Butiaba. Flames Break Out The second crackup came there when another plane failed to nego tiate a takeoff. Hemingway said all aboard had braced themselves for the shock. One wing broke into flames touched off by the engine. Hemingway opened the door with his head and shoulder and suffered cuts on the head and slight burns, His wife and the other occupants left through the front of the plane and were not burned Mrs. Hemingway's ribs ap parently were cracked when the plane swerved off the runway and into a plantation before catching fire. Hemingway and his - wife, the former Mary Welsh, well-known magazine correspondent, are mak ing a five-month safari through East Africa. Hemingway was clutching a bunch of bananas and a bottle of gin as he ' and his wife climbed painfully from their automobile here. The novelist's shirt was torn, his arm was swollen, and there was a big patch of adhesive tape on his head. Asked about his luck, he said: "I think she is running very good." Salem Schools LESLIE JUNIOR HIGH Brenda Aschenbrcnner and Bob Gates will vie for president of the Leslie Junior High School student body for the second se mester in the final elections next Monday, as a "result of the primaries held yesterdaj. Other primary winners who will compete Monday are Lu cille Brewer and Marilyn Mur phy, vice president; Barbara Henken and Colleen Nelson, sec retary; Kathy Heltzel and San dra Shorey, treasurer; Jim Rob inson and Gary Zwicker, ser geant at arms; Sara Allen and Beverly Bishop and Carol Hage mann and Joan Osko, song queens (one pair elected); and Kerry Benson and Jim Rawlings, yell king. Each candidate will give a speech before the final election Monday. ; j- (Story on Page One) By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Winter lashed with vengeance at the Pacific Northwest Monday from Canada to Oregon and from the Pacific to the Rockies. These were the top develop ments: l; About half of the Columbia River town of St. Helens, Ore., was i without water after a land slide; ripped out-a 100-foot section of water line. 1 Eight families at Enterprise, in Eastern Washington, were driv en i from their homes by waters of the lower Yakima river backed up by a massive ice jam. 31 ; The Grays Harbor area, of Southwest Washington was cov ered; by a 10 to 25-inch blanket of wet snow which toppled com munications lines. 4. j British Columbia and the Prairie provinces battled snow drifts as one of the worst cold waves. in years kept the mercury below zero in the interior for near ly two weeks. New! Slides ' Workers trying to repair the SL Helens water line were hampered by! new slides in the same gen eral; area, five miles west of the town. Heavy rains and snow were blamed. William Mutton. St. Helens mayor, said about half of the torn- out line had been replaced. But he said it was anybody's guess when all St. Helens residents would have city 'water again. The Yakima River ice jam which sent water to as high as 8 'to 10 inches in houses at Enterprise was seven miles long. It was lodged against a railroad bridge south of; Richland, but the bridge was not believed to be in danger. It I was the second time that an ice ;jam had forced families to move from their homes in the little town of 400 residents two miles west of Richland. Six fam ilies: were evacuated from their himes last Friday. Cities Cut Off The Grays Harbor storm cut both Aberdeen and Hoquiam on from telephone service t6 Olym piaJ The storm dumped up to 25 inches of snow at high spots around the two cities. Pacific County, bordered by the Columbia on the south and the Pacific on the west, was "blacked out' for nearly an hour and one- half; Monday when power lines went down before an onslaught of heavy, wet snow and high winds. j Blizzard conditions existed along the shores of Hood Canal, on the Kitsap Peninsula and along Puget Sound to the Canadian border. i There was one foot of snow throughout central Kitsap County, three inches at Olympia and 11 inches at both Bellingham and Everett. There were snow flurries at Seattle, but the white stuff melted almost as soon as it hit the ground. Phone Lines Down I But Grays Harbor was the hard est j hit. The storm knocked out 50 telephone lines between Aber-deeh-Hoquiam and Olympia and 80 between the two Grays Harbor cities and Westport. I Traffic moved slowly through the cities. An airline cancelled its morning flights to the Grays Har bor j area. And railroad offices at Aberdeen and Hoquiam were out of I contact with their Olympia, Centralia and Tacoma offices for a time. East of the Cascades, the tem perature dipped to zero at Yakima during the early morning hours Monday and to 10 above at Spo kane. It warmed up during the day, with the readings in the high twenties. Walla Walla's 40 was highest for the day on the East Side. f Tiff r -i - iucLartn Friend Wins Senate Okeh discussion are DrJ John Dyke, Salem dentist. Dr. Willard Stone, Marion County health officer, Dr. Charles Johnson, chemistry . pro fessor at Willamette University, Howard Kaffun, Salem attorney, John Geren, water department manager,, and " Wade Patterson, health educator with the Marion County Health Department WASHINGTON ( Robert E. Lee, former FBI agent and friefid of Sen, McCarthy (R-Wis), won Senate approval Monday as a member of the Communications Commission by a vote of 58-25. Sen. Monroney (D-Okla) led the fight against Lee, who had been serving- on the commission under a recess appointment by President Eisenhower since last fall. Voting against confirmation were 22 Democrats, 2 Republicans and the Senate's lone independent. Sen. Morse (of , Oregon. As a member of the FCC, Lee will pass upon licenses for televi sion, radio and other means of communication. Monroney told the Senate he felt that Lee,; who has had no experi ence n the field, did not have the background to be "a fighter for freedom of speech and the right of dissent" The Senate whipped through 1.- 389 nominations made by the Pres ident during the congressional re cess, which began last August Most of the nominations 1,330 were for , promotions in the mili tary services. Among the others was that of Fred M. Seaton, former Republi can congressman from Nebraska. who was approved as assistant secretary of defense. Morse made a brief speech praising the selection. He told the Senate! he had promised to say something good about the Eisen hower administration when he found an opportunity to do so. j 4 Suffer Minor Injuries in Head-on Crash Statesman News Service ALBANY Four persons sus tained minor injuries in a head-on two-car collision on Highway 99-E three miles north of Albany late Sunday night. Taken to Albany General Hos pital with head and chest injuries was Clifford H. Faust, Gresham Also hurt were Mr. and Mrs, Carl Fountain and 10-year-old son James, all of Lebanon. The Foun tains suffered only minor cuts and bruises and were treated at Lebanon Community Hospital. In vestigating state police said that both vehicles were badly damag ed, f A RECORD ALDUl.h hSMCIl IIEIIDERSOH "HOW TO PLAY MINSHALL - i ; ORGAN. 30 minutes!" Limited Ouinity Pint Corns First Served! COME INI SEC HEAR AND ENJOY? THE MINSHALL EisY-TO-PLAY home ORGAN FEATURING THE: AMAZING. NEVI - - DUETONE SPEAKERS' i Traditionally, Ih. jMinihoK Organ ; cn cf !h world"! finest now. with ' oddition of DUETONE SPEAKERS, hear for yourself; why iff Lbai!t for ; bettor listening. two SKirnts counro to civi you TOW-MAMA -A SIMENStONAt IliMO M6 Of TONES THROUGHOUT THI 100. i ' - -. V , , - . - ' v't ' - ' J I 2 -.v It r - - J 4 v i. Free telephene planning servlee. If you're thinTring of brjildin or remodeling. you can probabfy prpfit from the ideas you'll get from a teiepnone speoausi. ne can saow you the advantagei of concealed wiring and convenient telephone outlets. This free service-availaS through your Pacific Telephone busmess cce-is part of our effort to make your telefphdne ever more useful and convenient toyou. Pacific Telephone works to make your telephone a bigger value every daye this is I LIFE INSURANCE CHECK-UP MONTH FOR YOU I Yes, this is the month when Prudential Agentsiall over the West are helping policy owners review their lijfe insurance protection to be sure they are getting maximum benefits. Have you looked at your policies recently? Is vour correct name shown? Is the beneficiary the same one fyou'd name today? Does your insurance fit in with the present Social Security program? If your family is larger now, has your coverage been rearranged for adequate protection? i Your Prudential Agent is always glad to give you advice tad help on your insurance program. But he i dedicating this month to giving you extra service, to male sure your insurance coverage is the best you can have. I i -1 Cit e him call today. I The Prudential INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA i ! S ! ' i I Utor I. MrUr lKi. Wltif frtoarit L teaRtf ( If. , MrrtCCMtrH ' I. W. 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